A long-simmering allegation that Facebook execs took bribes from OnlyFans is now a lawsuit that will move forward, as several OnlyFans creators say rival adult sites were literally blacklisted onto a terrorist list.
At least two executives at Meta (parent company of Facebook) were accused of participating in a bribery scheme to help elevate the reach of OnlyFans, a company notorious for porn.
In a federal lawsuit filed in California by adult entertainers alleging corruption and misuse of internet databases intended to flag, among other things, content related to terrorism, three Meta executives have been named by name apparently by mistake. Nicola Mendelsohn, vice president of the global business team at Meta, and Nick Clegg, vice president of global policy, were named as the former 'John Does' in a lawsuit accusing them of accepting bribes on behalf of OnlyFans as part of a scheme to help the adult platform outcompete its competitors on Tuesday. This February, anonymous Meta workers were charged in a lawsuit